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Sep 27, 2012
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. >> that's right, carl. discover financial, the best performer in the s&p 500 after posting better-than-expected earnings. it's -- was down a bit and also its credit card loans. business grew by 2.4%. a lot of revenues, about 100 million came in from the add ones, identity theft protection, credit monitoring and those are things that they actually just settled with the new financial services bureau on. it will be interesting to see how those metrics change in the coming quarters, carl. >> what a roller coaster ride for that name over the past couple of days, bertha. thanks a lot. >>> there's a new way to watch your favorite television shows that brings the characters and sometimes the news anchors to life. we'll tell you all about that. then we'll talk to the man trying to abolish the income tax in the state of nebraska. and later, why buying a lemon could be good for your wallet. how do you know which ones to follow? the equity summary score consolidates the ratings of up to 10 independent research provider
. >> that's right, carl. discover financial, the best performer in the s&p 500 after posting better-than-expected earnings. it's -- was down a bit and also its credit card loans. business grew by 2.4%. a lot of revenues, about 100 million came in from the add ones, identity theft protection, credit monitoring and those are things that they actually just settled with the new financial services bureau on. it will be interesting to see how those metrics change in the coming quarters,...
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Sep 20, 2012
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i have good timing sometimes, carl. but before we get to our guest, i'll tell you, when you hear about this guy's story, in my instance i feel like standing up and singing "god bless america." here's a guy who came from a communist country. one of the stories told about thomas pedderfy is that growing up in communist hungary in the '50s, a friend of his coming back from austria gave him some wrigley gum. what did he do? he chopped it up in little pieces and started selling it for a profit. when he went back to school the principal at his school said this is a communist country. where are your morals at? another neat story about this gentleman, in 1977 some not only credited him, ok, as you pointed out being the father of high-speed trading, he might be the father of the tablet computer. in the '70s he tried to make a prototype that could be referred to as a tablet computer to trade what ultimately became high-speed trading. he's the founder of interactive brokers. current ce oh. a great american. welcome to the show, th
i have good timing sometimes, carl. but before we get to our guest, i'll tell you, when you hear about this guy's story, in my instance i feel like standing up and singing "god bless america." here's a guy who came from a communist country. one of the stories told about thomas pedderfy is that growing up in communist hungary in the '50s, a friend of his coming back from austria gave him some wrigley gum. what did he do? he chopped it up in little pieces and started selling it for a...
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Sep 17, 2012
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carl? >> the art market? >> kayla, what's your sense in terms of whether or not this group, one year later, has a better platform, a list of demands, any other sort of more central themes to rally around as opposed to these disparate people who want to occupy various things? >> reporter: right. melissa, i think that they definitely have their act together a little bit more, even if not their message. the fact that they are taking their protests to the lobbies of some of these corporations that they have began protesting a year ago instead of just sitting in a park. that is a roughly new development, but they still haven't really crafted that message. it's still very disparate. it's still just anti-corporation, anti-corporate greed, anti-big business, anti-american capitalism. and it's unclear at this point whether that will have any traction. we do know, especially in watching the gamesmanship in this election season, that the rhetoric around the 1% or the 99% is probably its greatest achie
carl? >> the art market? >> kayla, what's your sense in terms of whether or not this group, one year later, has a better platform, a list of demands, any other sort of more central themes to rally around as opposed to these disparate people who want to occupy various things? >> reporter: right. melissa, i think that they definitely have their act together a little bit more, even if not their message. the fact that they are taking their protests to the lobbies of some of these...
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Sep 11, 2012
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carl? >> thanks a lot. >>> meantime, the first chicago teachers strike in 25 years into the second day this morning. it's left 350,000 students at home. the most contentious issues, performance evaluations and recall rights for laid off teachers. kevin tibbells with the latest on that. >> for the second day running, parents of some 400,000 kids here in chicago are trying to find alternate places to take their children because the teachers here in the public school system remain on strike. i'm standing outside the headquarters of the chicago school board today. negotiations and this is probably the only bit of good news here, negotiations are continuing today. and the -- that talks are progressing and they could end this strike as early as today. unfortunately, from the teachers' side, their negotiators are saying that no deal is going to be made until the chicago public school board comes up with a better offer for them. what's the main sticking point? well, it doesn't really seem to be mon
carl? >> thanks a lot. >>> meantime, the first chicago teachers strike in 25 years into the second day this morning. it's left 350,000 students at home. the most contentious issues, performance evaluations and recall rights for laid off teachers. kevin tibbells with the latest on that. >> for the second day running, parents of some 400,000 kids here in chicago are trying to find alternate places to take their children because the teachers here in the public school system...
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Sep 5, 2012
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carl, we got to see it. i mean, this is not one of those where it's up in the air, it's okay either way. because of fedex which we're going to talk about. fedex shows you, listen. unless we turn the economy around we're going to have a lot more fedexes. >> let's bring it in. shares falling in premarket the package delivery company has cut their earnings guidance as weakness in the global economy constrained revenue growth at fedex express more than expected. fedex now seals the $1.37 to $1.43 for the quarter ended august 31st. analysts were looking for $1.56 per share. we should mention express handles a lot of the international, jim. that's what they're seeing, a global problem here. >> we saw july 25th u.p.s. said something similar. fedex did not say at the time. this is the first time we've had down quarter for fedex in three years. i think that the natural assumption is maybe amazon is not doing that well. i don't want to make the natural assumption because there is just, the derivative play is always so
carl, we got to see it. i mean, this is not one of those where it's up in the air, it's okay either way. because of fedex which we're going to talk about. fedex shows you, listen. unless we turn the economy around we're going to have a lot more fedexes. >> let's bring it in. shares falling in premarket the package delivery company has cut their earnings guidance as weakness in the global economy constrained revenue growth at fedex express more than expected. fedex now seals the $1.37 to...
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Sep 12, 2012
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harder and harder, carl to keep those secrets. we're here all day, jon's going in, i'm out, we're going to be using carrier pigeons. >> telepathy. >> to bring you the latest headlines as they cross first on cnbc. >> of course. >> back to you. >> fortt's got it all worked out. he knows how this thing works. we'll see you later, brian sullivan and jon fortt in san francisco. >>> the capital markets op-ed, and gary who was talking about the dangers, the costs, gary, of not owning apple. >> good time right after that segment. carl, i talk a lot about relative performance. i do it onair and off air. yesterday talking to a former colleague of mine. and we're talking about this idea relative performance if you don't own apple. you remember a year ago, i said if you don't own apple as an active manager, it's essentially being short the stock given the relative performance it's cost you. everyone wants to know what the numbers are. we're going to show you the numbers. take a look at these numbers right now. this is the cost of not owning a
harder and harder, carl to keep those secrets. we're here all day, jon's going in, i'm out, we're going to be using carrier pigeons. >> telepathy. >> to bring you the latest headlines as they cross first on cnbc. >> of course. >> back to you. >> fortt's got it all worked out. he knows how this thing works. we'll see you later, brian sullivan and jon fortt in san francisco. >>> the capital markets op-ed, and gary who was talking about the dangers, the...
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Sep 13, 2012
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carl? >> shows how many choices we're going to have in the future as they try to win the living room. >>> still to come, we'll be joined by a member of the joint member's advisory council. what's truly amazing about mercedes new mbrace2 system... is i can follow all my sports... catch the latest breaking news... keep in touch with friends... follow the financial headlines... find a great restaurant... and with siriusxm i can get weather forecasts... all from here. in my mercedes-benz. [ male announcer ] introducing mbrace2. the most comprehensive cloud-based telematics system on the road. it's your world, from your car. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. a short word that's a tall order. up your game. up the ante. and if you stumble, you get back up. up isn't easy, and we ought to know. we're in the business of up. everyday delta flies a quarter of million people while investing billions improving everything from booking to baggage claim. we're raising the bar on flying and tomorrow we wil
carl? >> shows how many choices we're going to have in the future as they try to win the living room. >>> still to come, we'll be joined by a member of the joint member's advisory council. what's truly amazing about mercedes new mbrace2 system... is i can follow all my sports... catch the latest breaking news... keep in touch with friends... follow the financial headlines... find a great restaurant... and with siriusxm i can get weather forecasts... all from here. in my...
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Sep 25, 2012
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but it is funny you mention that, carl. a deal was in the works. let's call it $5 billion that fell apart today. i don't know what the companies are, by the way. sort of get these hints occasionally because company a didn't feel synergies were there with company b. therefore they chose not to move ahead. that is typical of what's going on these days. >> remember, in this report they are very specifically saying here, when we announced the acquisition we said the benefits were 400 million by 2015. they are already getting there. now joint global talked on "mad money" that it's the after market part that is you need. in the end, when you buy at the top, you're very defensive. this is not aol/time warner. at the same time, had they waited a couple, 18 months, they would have gotten a very different dynamic. >> very different deal. it would have been time warner buying aol. by the way, greatest deal ever done for the shareholders. >> sometimes you have winners and losers. >> that's right. there always are. >> the entire sector is down across the board.
but it is funny you mention that, carl. a deal was in the works. let's call it $5 billion that fell apart today. i don't know what the companies are, by the way. sort of get these hints occasionally because company a didn't feel synergies were there with company b. therefore they chose not to move ahead. that is typical of what's going on these days. >> remember, in this report they are very specifically saying here, when we announced the acquisition we said the benefits were 400 million...
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Sep 28, 2012
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carl. >> thanks, david. when we come back president of france's first annual budget putting a large tax on the rich and large companies to slash the deficit. will the wealthy flee in response? first rick santelli is working on the next hour of "squawk on the street." hey, rick. >> hi, carl. you know, yesterday when the spanish budget came out people on the floor were running around. i grabbed one of my sources and said hey. do they like it? he goes they must. stocks have rallied. when did the stock market become the validation for all economic fundamentals? we know that quantitative easing distorts stock prices. this is the topic. the real topic is lest we forget because there have been stock markets in the past like the nasdaq that have important lessons for us to learn and we'll go over all of that at the top of the hour. [ horn honks ] hey, it's sandra -- from accounting. peter. i can see that you're busy... but you were gonna help us crunch the numbers for accounts receivable today. i mean i know that th
carl. >> thanks, david. when we come back president of france's first annual budget putting a large tax on the rich and large companies to slash the deficit. will the wealthy flee in response? first rick santelli is working on the next hour of "squawk on the street." hey, rick. >> hi, carl. you know, yesterday when the spanish budget came out people on the floor were running around. i grabbed one of my sources and said hey. do they like it? he goes they must. stocks have...
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carl? >> i remember asking you on friday if retailers other than apple stores would have them and your advice was to go to an apple store. that was a good call. meantime, this foxconn news, a fight breaks out at a dormitory. what do we know about whether or not that might impact the supply of the 5? >> reporter: hard to say. i was trying to get out of apple what the impact might be. the word out there is that the back plates for the iphone 5s might have been manufactured in this facility which is shut down for the day. what we know about what happened over the weekend, what foxconn is saying this uprising involved about 2,000 workers. it happened around 11:00 p.m. local time at a privately managed dorm there. the fight doesn't appear to have been work related, it was originally said it was between a worker and a guard. 79,000 workers at this facility overall. that's kind of a big incident. we'll have to wait and see how it affects supplies. >> we have disagreements at the coffee and water c
carl? >> i remember asking you on friday if retailers other than apple stores would have them and your advice was to go to an apple store. that was a good call. meantime, this foxconn news, a fight breaks out at a dormitory. what do we know about whether or not that might impact the supply of the 5? >> reporter: hard to say. i was trying to get out of apple what the impact might be. the word out there is that the back plates for the iphone 5s might have been manufactured in this...
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i'm melissa lee along with carl quintanilla. let's get you started. it looks like another drift lower. keep in mind we saw lower fractions. that's what i mean by drift when i say drift lower. take a look at the action over in europe. stocks continue to move further away from 14-month highs. the concern today that perhaps spain will not, in fact, seek a bailout. so our roadmap this morning starts with yet another warning from fedex, the shipping giant blaming a slow global economy. but is this a macroissue or consumers no longer paying extra for express service. >> apple did it. expectations still high as preorders for the iphone 5 cross 2 million. >> prices on "squawk box" this morning, speaking of which, what was up with oil's mysterious decline yesterday and is it bad for confidence. >> ford is being called the most important model in decades for that company. we're going to be hearing from the ceo alan mulally. fedex states the q1 results are below its own exec sagss saying weak global conditions damped growth. my big question today, jim, was when
i'm melissa lee along with carl quintanilla. let's get you started. it looks like another drift lower. keep in mind we saw lower fractions. that's what i mean by drift when i say drift lower. take a look at the action over in europe. stocks continue to move further away from 14-month highs. the concern today that perhaps spain will not, in fact, seek a bailout. so our roadmap this morning starts with yet another warning from fedex, the shipping giant blaming a slow global economy. but is this a...
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Sep 19, 2012
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thank very much. >> thanks, carl. we have some breaking news from groupon and let's go to julia boorstin with the latest. >> groupon is getting into mobile pages taking on established payers like american express and square which is partly owned by visa along with paypal and google. the service called groupon payments allows small businesses using groupon's merge ants apps to a touch a swiper and it will charge 15 cents per swipe plus fees and one point for mastercard, vase and discover. square charges merchants a flat 2.75% rate per swipe. groupon is targeting restaurants, salons and spas, businesses too small to pay the small fees that amex charges and too big to rely on square's doggel. it hopes to lure businesses by processing payments overnight instead of the days that most credit card companies take. plus businesses get analytics on their transactions, while groupon gets details on how consumers shop. let's take a look at how groupon sales are today and they're down over 80% since the company's ipo last november
thank very much. >> thanks, carl. we have some breaking news from groupon and let's go to julia boorstin with the latest. >> groupon is getting into mobile pages taking on established payers like american express and square which is partly owned by visa along with paypal and google. the service called groupon payments allows small businesses using groupon's merge ants apps to a touch a swiper and it will charge 15 cents per swipe plus fees and one point for mastercard, vase and...
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Sep 6, 2012
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good morning, rick. >> good morning, carl. i want to welcome my european sage mark rand from southwest securities and cover three topics, mark, conditionality and sterilization and growth. start with the first one. the conditionality takes away the notion everything is unlimit. it is all about the conditionality to traders on the floor. >> i agree. i think the big surprise is probably going to be the ecb will never be allowed to do anything, and i want to walk you down that path for a minute and give you the evidence. first place, the conditionality issue is centered to the ecb being able to do anything. that's that they agreed to. what do we find? we find in the last few days which none of your analysts have mentioned this morning, we find that the netherlands has just said the prime minister, there is not going to be any more money from the netherlands for grease and two days before that we have the finance minister of austria saying the austrians are done, they have had it, they're not going to any more austrian money to an
good morning, rick. >> good morning, carl. i want to welcome my european sage mark rand from southwest securities and cover three topics, mark, conditionality and sterilization and growth. start with the first one. the conditionality takes away the notion everything is unlimit. it is all about the conditionality to traders on the floor. >> i agree. i think the big surprise is probably going to be the ecb will never be allowed to do anything, and i want to walk you down that path for...
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Sep 26, 2012
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good morning, rick. >> good morning, carl. like an answering machine, there's a loop and the markets have a loop and we're seeing this loop again and we all know what it is. let's look at some one-month charts. it's starting to come down. you can see aggressively the boon chart, over the sea, over the pond. their rates on the ten-year maturity are looking very similar. also moving down. well, what's moving up? let's look at a one-month chart of two-year maturities in spain. you can see what's kicking up. about 25 basis points. you can see what's kicking up on the ten-year. very similar move. but as important as that is, it's a parallel shift on their curve, meaning the short end and the long end rates have moved up together. many believe the trigger is the next chart. we are bumping along a very significant area. if we start to move much below the steepness of 250 basis points that separate those two maturi maturities, it might be something to pay attention to. as for what's going on in europe, tomato, tomato what's in a word?
good morning, rick. >> good morning, carl. like an answering machine, there's a loop and the markets have a loop and we're seeing this loop again and we all know what it is. let's look at some one-month charts. it's starting to come down. you can see aggressively the boon chart, over the sea, over the pond. their rates on the ten-year maturity are looking very similar. also moving down. well, what's moving up? let's look at a one-month chart of two-year maturities in spain. you can see...
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Sep 12, 2012
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. >>> and carl, thanks so much. welcome to halftime, four hours to go until the close. and here's where we stand. we are in the green across the boards. take a look at the dow, 13,349, and s&p and nasdaq playing along today, as well. here's what we're following on "halftime" today, zuckerberg goes public, did facebook's face deliver? is it time to deliver the stock? >>> and is qe-3 coming? and what will it mean for the rally? but first, our top story, less than one hour to go until apple unveils its highly anticipated iphone 5. the stock keeps going higher, but are expectations growing too high for america's most loved company? we're trading all of these stories with pete najarian, joe ts teranova. is it going to pull back? >> well, there's a chance of it. i mean, if you're looking at the options right now. the options are signaling people are expecting a big move. look at the volatility of options that expires tomorrow, by the way, and you're expecting about, call it a $19 move right now in that stock based on what we're going to see today. what are we going to see tod
. >>> and carl, thanks so much. welcome to halftime, four hours to go until the close. and here's where we stand. we are in the green across the boards. take a look at the dow, 13,349, and s&p and nasdaq playing along today, as well. here's what we're following on "halftime" today, zuckerberg goes public, did facebook's face deliver? is it time to deliver the stock? >>> and is qe-3 coming? and what will it mean for the rally? but first, our top story, less than...
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Sep 11, 2012
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. >> watching shares of nam star up today, at this point, 3%, 3.4% nearly after carl eicahn issued a letter. i have a mesh an for the board, my cons are not threats, they are demands i take seriously in light of the investment, a 349 million investment, as should you, says icahn in light of your fiduciary obligations. goes on to talk about the history of and a half advice star and standing his ground here. >>> on the last day of the year, a slate of tax cuts expires, as you probably know, spending cuts automatically triggered unless there is a deal. they call it sequestration, fancy word. capitol hill reacting by playing the blame game. john harwood on the case. hi, john. >> hi, tyler. the question is soon about when you deal with the fiscal cliff and what constitutes soon. as of now, between now and the election, all you canposturing, we heard from republicans and democrats today. here is speaker john boehner. >> i'm not confident at all. listen, the house has done its job on both the sequester around on the looming tax hikes that will cost our economy some 700,000 jobs. the senate
. >> watching shares of nam star up today, at this point, 3%, 3.4% nearly after carl eicahn issued a letter. i have a mesh an for the board, my cons are not threats, they are demands i take seriously in light of the investment, a 349 million investment, as should you, says icahn in light of your fiduciary obligations. goes on to talk about the history of and a half advice star and standing his ground here. >>> on the last day of the year, a slate of tax cuts expires, as you...
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Sep 20, 2012
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we're already seen the report from senator carl levin. a democrat. head of the senate permanent subcommittee on investigations. senator levin said that he found significant abuses inside many american companies. >> multi-nationals have avoided billions of dollars in taxes using these offshore gimmicks. they have benefited greatly. but these loopholes and abuses exact a tremendous cost. >> reporter: there are two companies in the crosshairs today. first is microsoft. senate report saying from 2009 to 2011 microsoft was able to shift offshore nearly $21 billion or almost half its u.s. retail sales net revenue saving up to $4.5 billion in taxes on goods sold in the united states. we talked to microsoft. here's what they told us. they say, microsoft has a complex business and we must comply with the complicated tax code of the united states, resulting in an exceedingly complex tax structure. second company in the crosshairs here today is going to be hewlett-packa hewlett-packard. the senate committee saying since at least 2008, hp has used billions of do
we're already seen the report from senator carl levin. a democrat. head of the senate permanent subcommittee on investigations. senator levin said that he found significant abuses inside many american companies. >> multi-nationals have avoided billions of dollars in taxes using these offshore gimmicks. they have benefited greatly. but these loopholes and abuses exact a tremendous cost. >> reporter: there are two companies in the crosshairs today. first is microsoft. senate report...
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Sep 10, 2012
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carl quintanilla has the day off. let's take a look at how we're getting you started. edging off the multi-year highs hitting friday, dow looking to give up 30 points at the open. s&p giving up 2.50. we have red arrows across the board except for the ftse. this monday roadmap starts off with the multi-year highs we saw in stocks, pushed higher by multi-year highs on the likes of apple, google, procter & gamble and wells fargo. >> concerns about china grow deeper. imports and factory output were disappointing. could it mean more stimulus is on the way? >> the u.s. treasury slashing its stake in aig, becoming a minority shareholder for the first time since the financial crisis again. what it means for you, the taxpayer, in just a moment. we have to start with the markets, coming off a week in which the s&p 500 settled at its highest level since january 2008, the s&p and nasdaq posting their best weekly gains in three months. and the dow logging its best week since july 27th. friday's weaker than expected jobs report. >> you have to have the federal reserve say, we'll hav
carl quintanilla has the day off. let's take a look at how we're getting you started. edging off the multi-year highs hitting friday, dow looking to give up 30 points at the open. s&p giving up 2.50. we have red arrows across the board except for the ftse. this monday roadmap starts off with the multi-year highs we saw in stocks, pushed higher by multi-year highs on the likes of apple, google, procter & gamble and wells fargo. >> concerns about china grow deeper. imports and...
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Sep 28, 2012
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. >> that's carl's dog. more rat than dog really. >> lucky is really cute. >> we'll get some e-mails. there he is. there's lucky. >> in a new york apartment, that's a big dog. right? based on your living space, it takes up more than a german shepherd would p. >> i'm thinking about adopting a squirrel. >> and putting a little leash on it. let's take a look at the futures because it is the last trading day of the month. you'll see right now that the futures are down about 12 points, s&p 500 down about 1.8. and if you turn to see what happened in europe because obviously europe has been leading us around again for the last several days, in europe you do see green arrows both in london and germany. shanghai the market up by 1.4%, nikkei down by 79 points. oil prices the other big story that we've been following all week long. this morning they're up 43 cents to 92.28. i don't know if you saw the story on cnbc yesterday about how an oil trader who was drunk a couple years ago back in 2009 was the reason that pric
. >> that's carl's dog. more rat than dog really. >> lucky is really cute. >> we'll get some e-mails. there he is. there's lucky. >> in a new york apartment, that's a big dog. right? based on your living space, it takes up more than a german shepherd would p. >> i'm thinking about adopting a squirrel. >> and putting a little leash on it. let's take a look at the futures because it is the last trading day of the month. you'll see right now that the futures are...
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i'm carl quintanilla along with melissa lee. david faber. jim cramer is off today. a slew of data today. jobless claims were decent, down 26,000. a miss on durables, although there are some internal factors there. also revised second quarter gdp, although those numbers are almost three months old. europe, a lot of speculation around the globe about what the chinese central bank may or may not do next week as we've got
i'm carl quintanilla along with melissa lee. david faber. jim cramer is off today. a slew of data today. jobless claims were decent, down 26,000. a miss on durables, although there are some internal factors there. also revised second quarter gdp, although those numbers are almost three months old. europe, a lot of speculation around the globe about what the chinese central bank may or may not do next week as we've got
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[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most comprehensive identity theft protection, period. ordinary credit monitoring services may take 30 days to alert you. lifelock's 24/7 proactive protection would have alerted tom as soon as they noticed an attack within their network, before it was too late. and lifelock's bank account takeover alerts could have notified carl in time to help him protect his money. lifelock protects your social security number, money, credit, even the equity in your home. while identity theft can't be completely stopped, no one protects you better than lifelock, and lifelock stands behind that with the pow
[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most...
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126
Sep 11, 2012
09/12
by
CNN
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eye 126
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[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most comprehensive identity theft protection, period. ordinary credit monitoring services may take 30 days to alert you. lifelock's 24/7 proactive protection would have alerted tom as soon as they noticed an attack within their network, before it was too late. and lifelock's bank account takeover alerts could have notified carl in time to help him protect his money. lifelock protects your social security number, money, credit, even the equity in your home. while identity theft can't be completely stopped, no one protects you better than lifelock, and lifelock stands behind that with the pow
[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most...
120
120
Sep 10, 2012
09/12
by
CNNW
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eye 120
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[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most comprehensive identity theft protection, period. ordinary credit monitoring services may take 30 days to alert you. lifelock's 24/7 proactive protection would have alerted tom as soon as they noticed an attack within their network, before it was too late. and lifelock's bank account takeover alerts could have notified carl in time to help him protect his money. lifelock protects your social security number, money, credit, even the equity in your home. while identity theft can't be completely stopped, no one protects you better than lifelock, and lifelock stands behind that with the pow
[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most...
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Sep 5, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN
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host: was carl in new jersey. later this morning we will talk to the president of la rasa and other guests. the national journal will be starting his morning briefing from charlotte in just a little while. this is a focus on house and senate races nationwide. reid wilson, who was the editor of the hotline publication, and john dickerson of "time" will be the two maters at -- moderator's. representative chris van hollen will be one of the guests, along with jennifer duffy. she is an expert on senate and governor's races with the cook political report " -- report. and david wasserman, you also probably know well on the house side for the cook political report. john on the independent line from richmond, virginia. caller: i want to say that i've watched both the republican convention and yesterday, the democrat convention. you are seeing way too much, and circumstance from a lot of the speakers. they are trying to get slogan's going and stuff like that. it was very obvious last night with the democrat convention. but
host: was carl in new jersey. later this morning we will talk to the president of la rasa and other guests. the national journal will be starting his morning briefing from charlotte in just a little while. this is a focus on house and senate races nationwide. reid wilson, who was the editor of the hotline publication, and john dickerson of "time" will be the two maters at -- moderator's. representative chris van hollen will be one of the guests, along with jennifer duffy. she is an...
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Sep 16, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN
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eye 223
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and he and carl evan and several others were talking about a plan that might seek to replace the defense cuts by raising taxes. at long last, after all of this fighting, raising some taxes. is that, do you think, is such an idea, would that be ameanable in the house, is anybody talking about it? do you think, as we get closer to the fiscal cliff, it might become something people will be willing to consider? >> that remains to be seen. you know, in the heat of the election has passed us in november, then is the time we need to sit down and be very, very serious about dealing with it. it would be disastrous, military especially. we would go back to preworld war ii army marine personnel. we would go back to 1915 on naval ships, on navy ships. and this kind of a world that we live in, that's just intolerable. we simply cannot do that. so i think the pressure will be intense. after the election, and people say well, the election's over, let's get down to business. i think the pressure's going to be intense. the deal with the sequesteration matter, and i've noticed, i think it's is so-called g
and he and carl evan and several others were talking about a plan that might seek to replace the defense cuts by raising taxes. at long last, after all of this fighting, raising some taxes. is that, do you think, is such an idea, would that be ameanable in the house, is anybody talking about it? do you think, as we get closer to the fiscal cliff, it might become something people will be willing to consider? >> that remains to be seen. you know, in the heat of the election has passed us in...
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Sep 17, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN
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eye 181
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in the "new york times this morning it says -- memphis, tennessee, carl, a democrat. what do you think? caller: how are you? i am -- it should be a limit to freedom of speech, especially if it causes a public uproar and other problems. you've got a lot of people that have intelligent input, but you have a lot of people that don't. for people to just try to create trouble, that is crazy. so, it needs to be a limit on what the media picks up and sends abroad. the computer is international, so everybody gets an eye on what some radicalist might see as freedom of speech. host: is it not all subjective? caller: the thing is, you have so many, just like america, we are very diverse. therefore, something needs to be regulated. we just cannot get on the internet and say anything. what type of country are we to allow people to do that? host: we will keep the conversation going this morning, but i want to give you other headlines on some other topics. here's the chicago tribune on the teachers' strike -- and in the tallahassee democrat, the front page of their paper -- she is e
in the "new york times this morning it says -- memphis, tennessee, carl, a democrat. what do you think? caller: how are you? i am -- it should be a limit to freedom of speech, especially if it causes a public uproar and other problems. you've got a lot of people that have intelligent input, but you have a lot of people that don't. for people to just try to create trouble, that is crazy. so, it needs to be a limit on what the media picks up and sends abroad. the computer is international,...
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Sep 12, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN
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so far -- host: let's go to carl. caller: i have a couple of comments. i have been in the gas and oil industry on and off for 40 years, and there are so many misconceptions i am hearing, it is making me pull my hair out. let me say a couple of things. one, talking about the keystone pipeline and how it is "going to ruin the aquifer in the midwest ," when all these people that say this -- i do not hear one of them say we do have quite a few hundred miles of pipes out there right now, and in fact they have been working successfully for many, many years. as long as they're put in and maintained properly, for the most part they do not leak. two, we need that pipeline. we have all this oil and gas being drilled in south dakota. it cannot get to the refinery. what refineries we have left, because now we have the epa, who has created conditions where the refineries have to add a biomass which does not exist anywhere but in the laboratory. and they are finding -- they are finding the refineries for not using a product that does not exist. guest: trans canada wou
so far -- host: let's go to carl. caller: i have a couple of comments. i have been in the gas and oil industry on and off for 40 years, and there are so many misconceptions i am hearing, it is making me pull my hair out. let me say a couple of things. one, talking about the keystone pipeline and how it is "going to ruin the aquifer in the midwest ," when all these people that say this -- i do not hear one of them say we do have quite a few hundred miles of pipes out there right now,...
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Sep 9, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN
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these banks -- and i have read the findings of the senate hearings on the bank ing that karl levin -- carl levin shared and they were found guilty of prosecutable fraud. now obama, he turned it over to the justice department and obama and holder have done nothing to these banks. they're accomplices. they're criminals. romney will be the same. host: gary, thank you for the call. alan colmes, your response. guest: i think we needed to save the banks. i'm not sure obama is an accomplice to bank fraud. i think this president has actually gone after wall street, the people who gave him money to get elected, he has done wall street reform and bank reform. i'm not sure i agree he's an accomplice to a crime. i think it's a pretty extreme statement. you know, there are people who don't like any politicians, think they're all crimes, i don't particularly have that view. i respect your opinion, sir, but i don't see it that way. this president has been actually pretty tough in reinstalling some of the regulations that we lost during years of republican rule. host: is barack obama a liberal, was bill c
these banks -- and i have read the findings of the senate hearings on the bank ing that karl levin -- carl levin shared and they were found guilty of prosecutable fraud. now obama, he turned it over to the justice department and obama and holder have done nothing to these banks. they're accomplices. they're criminals. romney will be the same. host: gary, thank you for the call. alan colmes, your response. guest: i think we needed to save the banks. i'm not sure obama is an accomplice to bank...
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1.6K
Sep 2, 2012
09/12
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host: carl is on the line for the republicans. caller: you know, one reason -- yesterday morning i was watching your program and your moderator read a twitter message. vitter throwing peanuts at a black cameraperson and said that this is the way they treat animals. this is just a twitter message. this reminds me of washington, d.c., when they said the tea party was yelling racial epithets at the congress people. they have no proof. one guy offered $10,000 for someone who could show proof. everyone carries a cell phone, a camera and can clear their name. get down there and read incendiary stuff like that. tell your sources. tell us who reported it and if they have proof. host: that was carl, berkeley springs. steve, independent line. good morning to you. caller: good morning. host: why is washington so divided? caller code because what -- republicans have been in campaign mode since obama came into office. even mitt romney in his exceptions speech as the republican nominee said that he fully expected that any new president would ga
host: carl is on the line for the republicans. caller: you know, one reason -- yesterday morning i was watching your program and your moderator read a twitter message. vitter throwing peanuts at a black cameraperson and said that this is the way they treat animals. this is just a twitter message. this reminds me of washington, d.c., when they said the tea party was yelling racial epithets at the congress people. they have no proof. one guy offered $10,000 for someone who could show proof....
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Sep 18, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN
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eye 147
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. -- carl. caller: these focus groups seem to be educated people. they are fools. >> why is the? >> i live in illinois. we are not even getting campaign commercials. they live in virginia. they are getting bombarded. i do not get it. every commercial is a political commercial. have biasesese people they have failed to recognize, and that is why they have failed to make decisions. i heard this one guy say, i believe in trickle-down economics. trickle-down does not work. likes our next call is from -- >> our next call is from iowa. it is another battleground states. caller: i was originally from debute. i lost my job. >> what was your job is? >> it was a printing company. under obamacare, they closed. we had to read about it in the paper. jobs in iowa, he promised us health care. i lost my job. my husband died of three months of cancer. we have no insurance. we have nothing, so where is the health care he promised us four years. people need to wake up and. >> who are you voting for? >> i am voting for mitt romney, and i am a registered democrat. i ain't voting for obama. my life is
. -- carl. caller: these focus groups seem to be educated people. they are fools. >> why is the? >> i live in illinois. we are not even getting campaign commercials. they live in virginia. they are getting bombarded. i do not get it. every commercial is a political commercial. have biasesese people they have failed to recognize, and that is why they have failed to make decisions. i heard this one guy say, i believe in trickle-down economics. trickle-down does not work. likes our...
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Sep 1, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN2
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the sat had been developed by a man named carl brigham with--working with other people carl brigham was one of the psychologists who created the group iq test. he also wrote one of the most infamous racist books--i think it was called a "study of american intelligence"--in which he warned the american people, after world war i, looking at these iq test results, that the nation would be in grave danger if it didn't stop immigration because the people flowing into the us in large numbers from europe were--had the lowest iqs and that it was going to be a serious threat to the future of the nation. brigham's work was widely reported at the time, and it took him several years before he wrote a tiny article saying, 'i think i may have been wrong'; that it may have been a mistake to do--make the huge leaps he had and to use the iq test scores the way he had. but by then, the congress had passed immigration restriction, and by then--this was by the late '20s--he was working for the college board developing the sat. and the college board, which is this group of colleges which had collaborated--t
the sat had been developed by a man named carl brigham with--working with other people carl brigham was one of the psychologists who created the group iq test. he also wrote one of the most infamous racist books--i think it was called a "study of american intelligence"--in which he warned the american people, after world war i, looking at these iq test results, that the nation would be in grave danger if it didn't stop immigration because the people flowing into the us in large...
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Sep 23, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 149
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. >> host: well, the first call for our guests comes from carl in elizabeth, new jersey. carl, you're on booktv. please, go ahead. >> caller: thank you, peter. this is a great privilege. just a week ago i got mr. smith's book on eisenhower out of the local library, and i'm absorbed in it, and i've also, i'm in the middle of drafting a letter to david and to his father. and now that i see the two eisenhowers on stage together, it's going to have a third addressee, ms. eisenhower as well. i have a specific -- i also want to say that my earliest political memory is my mother weeping when general eisenhower was nominated at the '52 republican convention, so that gives away what my age might be, but i have a serious question concerning how history is recorded regarding the u2 incident of may 1, 1960. and i have reference to a memo of general goodpastor who was an aide to president eisenhower writing that after checking with the president i informed mr. bissell of the cia that one additional operation, a u2 operation, may be undertaken provided it is carried out prior to may 1s
. >> host: well, the first call for our guests comes from carl in elizabeth, new jersey. carl, you're on booktv. please, go ahead. >> caller: thank you, peter. this is a great privilege. just a week ago i got mr. smith's book on eisenhower out of the local library, and i'm absorbed in it, and i've also, i'm in the middle of drafting a letter to david and to his father. and now that i see the two eisenhowers on stage together, it's going to have a third addressee, ms. eisenhower as...
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259
Sep 14, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 259
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of course we've got our friend, carl rove and his status crossroads of america putting in millions of dollars. but i'm getting at is it's handful of people, maybe six to eight people who will spend more money on this election than all of organized labor and i would say over 100 million americans. they won't put that kind of money in this election and i think people like to say, is that good for the country? is that what our forefathers saw that a handful of people, six to eight people couldn't put more money in an election and control events more than maybe 100 million people that work with their hands every day, the 13 million people and families in the labor movement and the other people not in labor movement that are out there working every day and doing the hard work. there's something wrong with that and that goes back to citizens united is citizens united was the worst thing that ever happened to this country right now. it's upsetting the balance and democracy. i think obama is going to win, but what does this pertain for the future? eventually they get richer and richer and mor
of course we've got our friend, carl rove and his status crossroads of america putting in millions of dollars. but i'm getting at is it's handful of people, maybe six to eight people who will spend more money on this election than all of organized labor and i would say over 100 million americans. they won't put that kind of money in this election and i think people like to say, is that good for the country? is that what our forefathers saw that a handful of people, six to eight people couldn't...
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Sep 22, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 162
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carl you are on booktv. please go ahead. >> thank you peter. this is a great privilege. mr. smith's book on eisenhower i got at the library and i am the middle of drafting a letter to david and his father. now that i see the two eisenhower's onstage together, it's going to have a third addressee, mrs. eisenhower as well. i have a -- i also want to say my earliest political memory is my mother saying general eisenhower was nominated at the 52 republican convention so that gives away what my age might be but i have a serious question concerning how history is recorded regarding the incident of may 1, 1960 and i have reference to mmo of general who was in a two president eisenhower. after checking with the present i informed mr. bissell of the cia that the u2 makar pressure may be undertaken provided it is carried out prior to may 1. that memo and less is written to cover general goodpaster -- suggests that the u2 might not have been authorized by a president president eisenhower but in fact would would have bea rogue operation directed by the director of central intelligence.
carl you are on booktv. please go ahead. >> thank you peter. this is a great privilege. mr. smith's book on eisenhower i got at the library and i am the middle of drafting a letter to david and his father. now that i see the two eisenhower's onstage together, it's going to have a third addressee, mrs. eisenhower as well. i have a -- i also want to say my earliest political memory is my mother saying general eisenhower was nominated at the 52 republican convention so that gives away what...
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166
Sep 8, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 166
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. >> host: carl, you are on with michael beschloss. >> caller: i just want to say there aren't a lot of people in this world that could fill the shoes of brian lamb and you do a magnificent job keeping level and asking pointed questions and not in searching yourself overly in the conversation but bringing out the best. >> guest: both proud sons of indiana too. >> caller: a privilege to speak to michael beschloss. i have been a c-span and for decades and the last person i was able to talk to on a program was edwin meese. that makes me pretty far back. i have reference to michael's second book "mayday: eisenhower, khrushchev and the u-2 affair". i believe it is on page 10. i don't have the book in front of me but it is in my collection where he relates a conversation that he had with president eisenhower's son john was a close aide to the president during the incident -- that is the focus of that book. i was hoping michael beschloss might be able for the viewers to paint a picture of the order president eisenhower gave to the then director of the cia concerning no more overflights afte
. >> host: carl, you are on with michael beschloss. >> caller: i just want to say there aren't a lot of people in this world that could fill the shoes of brian lamb and you do a magnificent job keeping level and asking pointed questions and not in searching yourself overly in the conversation but bringing out the best. >> guest: both proud sons of indiana too. >> caller: a privilege to speak to michael beschloss. i have been a c-span and for decades and the last person i...
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50
Sep 4, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 50
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. >> host: we have carl from elizabeth, new jersey. >> caller: thank you, peter. i just want to say that there aren't a lot of people in this world that can fill the shoes of brian lamb and you. you to do a magnificent job. in keeping level, asking points, not inserting yourself overly in the conversation. but bringing out the best. >> host: both proud sons of indiana, to. >> caller: it is a privilege to be able to speak to michael beschloss. i've been a fan for decades, and i think the last person i was actually able to talk to on the program was edwin meese. >> guest: we are two peas in a pod. >> caller: in reference to michael's second book, "mayday", i don't have the book is for in front of me, although it is in my collection -- where he relates to a conversation that he had with president eisenhower's son, john eisenhower, who was a close aide to the president. during the incident, which is the focus of that book. i was hoping that michael beschloss might be able to pay a picture of the order that president eisenhower gave to the director of the cia, allen du
. >> host: we have carl from elizabeth, new jersey. >> caller: thank you, peter. i just want to say that there aren't a lot of people in this world that can fill the shoes of brian lamb and you. you to do a magnificent job. in keeping level, asking points, not inserting yourself overly in the conversation. but bringing out the best. >> host: both proud sons of indiana, to. >> caller: it is a privilege to be able to speak to michael beschloss. i've been a fan for decades,...
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129
Sep 2, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
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eye 129
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. >> host: we have carl from elizabeth, new jersey. >> caller: thank you, peter. i just want to say that there aren't a lot of people in this world that can fill the shoes of brian lamb and you. you to do a magnificent job. in keeping level, asking points, not inserting yourself overly in the conversation. but bringing out the best. >> host: both proud sons of indiana, to. >> caller: it is a privilege to be able to speak to michael beschloss. i've been a fan for decades, and i think the last person i was actually able to talk to on the program was edwin meese. >> guest: we are two peas in a pod. >> caller: in reference to michael's second book, "mayday", i don't have the book is for in front of me, although it is in my collection -- where he relates to a conversation that he had with president eisenhower's son, john eisenhower, who was a close aide to the president. during the incident, which is the focus of that book. i was hoping that michael beschloss might be able to pay a picture of the order that president eisenhower gave to the director of the cia, allen du
. >> host: we have carl from elizabeth, new jersey. >> caller: thank you, peter. i just want to say that there aren't a lot of people in this world that can fill the shoes of brian lamb and you. you to do a magnificent job. in keeping level, asking points, not inserting yourself overly in the conversation. but bringing out the best. >> host: both proud sons of indiana, to. >> caller: it is a privilege to be able to speak to michael beschloss. i've been a fan for decades,...
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[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most comprehensive identity theft protection, period services may take 30 days to alert you. lifelock's 24/7 proactive protection would have alerted tom as soon as they noticed an attack within their network, and lifelock's bank account takeover alerts d have notified carl in time to help him protect his money. lifelock protects your social security number, money, credit, even the equity in your home. while identity theft can't be completely stopped, no one protects you better than lifelock, and lifelock stands behind that with the power of their $1 million service guarantee. you have so mu
[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most...
129
129
Sep 10, 2012
09/12
by
FBC
tv
eye 129
favorite 0
quote 0
[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most comprehensive identity theft protection, period services may take 30 days to alert you. lifelock's 24/7 proactive protection would have alerted tom as soon as they noticed an attack within their network, and lifelock's bank account takeover alerts d have notified carl in time to help him protect his money. lifelock protects your social security number, money, credit, even the equity in your home. while identity theft can't be completely stopped, no one protects you better than lifelock, and lifelock stands behind that with the power of their $1 million service guarantee. you have so mu
[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most...
184
184
Sep 25, 2012
09/12
by
FBC
tv
eye 184
favorite 0
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[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most comprehensive identity theft protection, period services may take 30 days to alert you. lifelock's 24/7 proactive protection would have alerted tom as soon as they noticed an attack within their network, and lifelock's bank account takeover alerts d have notified carl in time to help him protect his money. lifelock protects your social security number, money, credit, even the equity in your home. while identity theft can't be completely stopped, no one protects you better than lifelock, and lifelock stands behind that with the power of their $1 million service guarantee. you have so mu
[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most...
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97
Sep 22, 2012
09/12
by
FBC
tv
eye 97
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everybody is reportedly fiber-optic according to fox news channel's carl cameron, but again, it was a flight from omaha to louisiana. 10 people on board the plane including ann romney, made a successful and safe emergency landing in denver. back to you, melissa. melissa: all right. adam shapiro thanks so much. welcome back to the special edition of "money", open for business. we're live in houston, texas, to dig into what makes this city so business friendly for wide variety of industries. here is a fun factoid. with more than 11,000 restaurants to choose from, 11,000, houstonians eat out more than any other city in the u.s., four times a week. the national average is roughly three. what is in the secret sauce of this booming business? who better to tell us than tillman fertita, billionaire, sole owner, chairman and ceo of houston-based chain, landry's. largest privately owned entertainment and gaming company. >> thank you, melissa people love to. melissa: people love to eat out here, huh. >> amazing. people eat out almost every single night. melissa: you have 30 properties internatio
everybody is reportedly fiber-optic according to fox news channel's carl cameron, but again, it was a flight from omaha to louisiana. 10 people on board the plane including ann romney, made a successful and safe emergency landing in denver. back to you, melissa. melissa: all right. adam shapiro thanks so much. welcome back to the special edition of "money", open for business. we're live in houston, texas, to dig into what makes this city so business friendly for wide variety of...
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[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most comprehensive identity theft protection, period services may take 30 days to alert you. lifelock's 24/7 proactive protection would have alerted tom as soon as they noticed an attack within their network, and lifelock's bank account takeover alerts d have notified carl in time to help him protect his money. lifelock protects your social security number, money, credit, even the equity in your home. while identity theft can't be completely stopped, no one protects you better than lifelock, and lifelock stands behind that with the power of their $1 million service guarantee. you have so mu
[tires squeal] now meet carl who works from the coffee shop and uses the free wi-fi. marie works from there too. she's an identity thief who used a small device to grab his wi-fi signal, then stole enough personal information to hijack and drain his bank accounts. every year, millions of americans learn all it may take to devastate your life is a little personal information in the wrong hands. this is identity theft and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most...